I'm starting to feel guilty for making great bread without improvers!
Jen
Good to hear that tesco are still prepared to give away fresh yeast - our 2 nearest ASDAs don't any more
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Gordon
At the risk of being shot down again. Has anyone read 'The Handmade Loaf' by Dan Lepard ? see Dans Site In it he describes how to make a "leven" by exposing a flour and water mix to the air...
This sounds like the sourdough starter I mentioned previously and mean to try again.
Another way of achieving this is to do what some craft bakers do - keep a lump of dough from one day to the next. The proving rising times are, I guess, longer with this method.
One pitfall with the bread improver method (that I accept has merits for its speed and consistency) is that flavour in bread tends to develop with time. Certainly, my experience is that bread made with a starter (poolish or biga), from the previous day, have more flavour, and also for some reason, a better texture.
My next experiments will be to make a sourdough that doesn't taste awful - something I didn't achieve when I tried before. Failing that, I will give a 'saved dough' system a try.
My aim is to make bread simply, so that it fits easily into my life-style, at the same time I would like to make it with as few additives as possible.